Dallas police are no longer investigating a woman's claim that singer R. Kelly intentionally gave her a sexually transmitted disease without telling her, but her attorney says authorities in New York could still bring charges against Kelly.

The woman's attorney, Lee Merritt, said Wednesday that the criminal case had been transferred to New York, where his client and Kelly first had sexual contact.

Dallas police said they have not filed charges against Kelly and consider the case closed pending any new information regarding the complaint. Police said the investigation concluded after officers determined no criminal offense had occurred within the city of Dallas.

Charges could still be brought against Kelly in New York in response to his client's accusation, Merritt said. In Texas and New York, someone who knowingly transmits an STD to another person without disclosing it can be charged with a crime.

Merritt has previously said Kelly's representatives had invited Rodgers backstage at a concert in 2017, and Kelly groomed her over several months to join a "sex cult."

Rodgers filed a lawsuit against Kelly in New York, alleging that Kelly coerced her into sex and knowingly gave her herpes.

The lawsuit called Kelly's alleged abuse of Rodgers a "run-of-the-mill R. Kelly sexual abuse case," citing a pattern in which Kelly pursues teenage girls and young women, lures them into relationships, grooms them into his "sexual inner circle" and manipulates them with behavior designed to "mentally break" them.

Kelly has repeatedly denied all accusations against him. In regards to Rodgers' complaint, a representative previously told The Washington Post that he "categorically denies all claims and allegations."

His management team said in a statement at the time of the April allegations that they will "vigorously resist this attempted public lynching of a black man who has made extraordinary contributions to our culture."

A Lifetime documentary series that aired last week, Surviving R. Kelly, chronicles many women's allegations that Kelly physically and sexually abused them.

Merritt said Rodgers was encouraged by the increase in attention to allegations of Kelly's abuse since the documentary series aired.

"She was discouraged, actually, prior to this getting picked up in the media," Merritt said. "She felt like there was not a lot of investment in bringing him to justice."

Two Dallas-area radio stations are among the first to ban R. Kelly in the wake of sexual assault allegations

The 52-year-old artist could be facing a criminal investigation in Georgia prompted by the series, CNN reported Tuesday.

An attorney for the family of one of the women featured in the series said the Fulton County district attorney contacted him after the show aired and is conducting an investigation into Kelly.